In Brief:
- Austria wants to impose a 27.5 percent capital gains tax on digital tokens starting in March 2022.
- The European Union’s approach to crypto taxes is uneven.
- Governments and tax experts still have a lot of challenges to overcome.
Austria recently declared that it intends to tax crypto similarly to stock and bond investments. As part of larger tax reform, the country plans to impose a 27.5 percent capital gains tax on digital tokens starting in March 2022.
According to Austria, its new structure will be the first of its sort in the European Union. The levy will not apply to crypto holdings purchased before the new tax laws go into force. When the occurrence of selling the tokens occurs, the levy will be applied. Investors will not be taxed or compensated for any losses if they sell one token to buy another.
In the field of crypto tax, Austria has achieved tremendous development. Blockpit is a company that automates bitcoin tax computations, staking revenue, and other crypto-related operations. In addition to the United States, the company’s platform is used in five European nations.
According to empirical research conducted by the European Commission, the estimated Bitcoin capital gains tax in 2020 will be 12.7 billion euros, including 3.6 billion euros in realised gains. Most Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, according to the report, do not appear to regard cryptocurrencies as equal to sovereign nation currencies, but rather as intangible property.
Additional countries in the European Union do not provide clear tax advice. Depending on the jurisdiction, the meaning of a taxable event differs. In France, only crypto-to-fiat transfers may be considered taxable. In Italy, the Netherlands, and Portugal, cryptocurrencies are not subject to capital gains tax unless they are considered speculative. This isn’t even close to being a comprehensive picture.
Tax professionals worry that pre-internet regulations are difficult to apply in the digital age. Tax authorities are scrambling to keep up with the crypto industry, which is expanding at such a fast rate. Many people feel that the US taxman is particularly vigilant in ensuring that businesses pay all necessary bitcoin taxes. Tax authorities face challenges as a result of unresolved jurisdictional issues for a currency that appears to have no jurisdiction.
Determining who owns cryptocurrency is one of the challenges in taxing it. To get investor information, the Internal Revenue Service used to send court summonses to exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken. This data was analysed to see if there were any discrepancies between tax information provided to the IRS by crypto investors and exchange activity. HMRC, the UK’s tax authority, has been requesting listings of crypto exchanges for some years.
President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion tax infrastructure bill includes provisions for the immediate reporting of capital gains on digital assets to the Internal Revenue Service. Also, in its infrastructure bill, Congress attempted to broaden the definition of “broker” to encompass any company that affects the transfer of digital assets on behalf of another person, which enraged crypto miners.